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I listen, I forget. I see, I remember. I do, I understand. Old Chinese Proverb

Learning Strategy. I listen, I forget. I see, I remember. I do, I understand. Old Chinese Proverb. Learning Strategy.

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I listen, I forget. I see, I remember. I do, I understand. Old Chinese Proverb

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  1. Learning Strategy I listen, I forget.I see, I remember.I do, I understand. Old Chinese Proverb

  2. Learning Strategy Business simulations are a form of combative training where participants pit their business skills against those of formidable opponents under the watchful eye of a training coach.

  3. When we study one discipline at a time, we are like a bunch of blind people trying to understand what an elephant is. It’s a sheet of rawhide. It’s a steel tube. Please tell me what it is? It’s a tree trunk. It’s a snake.

  4. With business simulations, you can crawl all over and under the new venture to help you to see and understand the whole thing. Accounting Marketing Distribution It is an enterprise! Production Finance Human Resources

  5. Team of Experts Helped to Design a Very Realistic Learning Environment Joyce Russellteam work, human resources Harry Bruceleadership, governance Jim Reeveaccounting, profit analysis Sarah Gardial & Bob Woodruffcustomer value Jim Wansleyfinance Ernie Cadottemarketing Ken Gilbertproduction processes Ivan Slimakbrand design, quality processes Tom Mentzersupply chain Dominique Garvalbusiness strategy

  6. Learning Strategy: Learn by Doing Participants learn about all aspects of business by managing a simulated business. The Marketplace Live scenario follows the lifecycle of a new product and new business. Business decisions are introduced as they become relevant in the evolution of the company.

  7. Mental Discipline and Business Culture Live and breathe strategic planning and management in a rapidly changing environment. Develop leadership, teamwork and interpersonal skills. Promote better decision making by learning to manage a totally integrated company, including the management of sales outlets, marketing, production, and human and financial resources.

  8. Mental Discipline and Business Culture • Crystallize the financial implications of business decisions and how they flowto bottom-line performance. • Facilitate learning of important business concepts, principles and ways of thinking.

  9. Mental Discipline and Business Culture Discover how important it is to use market data and competitive signals to adjust the strategic plan and more tightly focus business tactics.

  10. Mental Discipline and Business Culture • Build confidence through knowledge and experience.

  11. How is the Business Simulation Conducted? • Teams are placed in a entrepreneurial scenario - starting up and running a new business venture. • The opposition is played out by competing teams.

  12. The Objective is to Profitably Capture a Dominant Market Position • opponent • Business Team • Market • opponent • opponent

  13. Business Teams • Each team member assumes a tactical area of responsibility: • Marketing // Finance // Distribution • Production // Overall Leadership

  14. How Conducted? • Business team receives information on current situation. • Current situation is evaluated, strategy formulated and tactics set in place. • Tactical decisions are fed into the Marketplace Live simulator, along with decisions of opponents. • Results of decisions are fed back to business team.

  15. How Conducted? • The business team can acquire information on what is happening in the marketplace: • customer reaction to market decisions • competitor actions • Current situation is evaluated, strategy formulated, and tactics set in place. • Tactical decisions are again fed into the MarketplaceLive simulator.

  16. Game Scenario You and your business partners have decided to enter the international microcomputer industry. The microcomputer industry is in its introductory stage of the product life cycle. Several other international new venture firms are entering the market at the same time.

  17. Sales Offices

  18. Market Segments: Market Structure

  19. Chronology of Events Q1: Organize the team, name the company, analyze market information, establish strategic direction and set up shop (design brands open a sales office and/or international web center, and build a factory). Q2: Test-market brands, prices, ad copies, media campaigns, sales staffing, and internet tactics. Determine compensation package for employees and production schedule for each brand.

  20. Chronology of Events Q3: Study end user feedback, competitive tactics, employee productivity, factory operations, and financial performance and adjust strategy.

  21. Chronology of Events Q4: Perform a comprehensive strategic analysis and prepare a business plan. Present strategic analysis, business plan, and financial request to venture capitalists. Q4 – Q6: Initiate international roll-out campaign.

  22. Chronology of Events • End of Game - Prepare report to the Board regarding: • performance since presentation of Business Plan • deviations from plan • justification for departures • strategic analysis of current situation • plan for future

  23. Equity Financing (Q1-Q3) The initial capitalization is $4M which is being invested by the executive team over the first 3 quarters; $2M in Q1 and $1M in Q2 and Q3. The executive team owns 100% of the company. Forty thousand shares of stock will be issued to the executive team in exchange for their $4M. The initial stock value is $100/share.

  24. Equity Financing (Q4) • At the start of Q4, the executive team will have the opportunity to request up to $4M from venture capitalists. • The venture capitalists will expect a strategic plan for the second year in business, including: • strategic analysis of the current situation • strategy: goals // priorities // strategic thrusts • tactical plan: geographic expansion // R&D plant expansion // etc. • pro forma financial statements through Q6

  25. Debt Financing (Q4 and Beyond) • The bank will extend a line of credit to the executive team equal to one and a half times the firm's equity position in the previous quarter. • The bank is highly risk adverse and will call in your loan in part or whole if your debt capacity declines due to unusual or extended losses.

  26. Special Financing Needs The bank is intolerant of poor financial management. If a firm ends a quarter with a negative cash position, the bank will contact a loan shark by the name of Guido to obtain an emergency loan to cover the firm's checking account.

  27. Guido’s Financing Terms Guido requires repayment in the next quarter. The emergency loan interest rate is a sliding scale which begins at 10% per quarter and may go as high as 25% per quarter. For each $100 which Guido places in your checking account, he will take one share of stock in your firm. The issuing of stock to Guido causes a dilution of your stock value and your share of the company.

  28. Bankruptcy A firm is technically bankrupt if its cumulative losses exceed its equity investment. • Bankruptcy occurs when the sum of retained earnings and the common and preferred stock is a negative number. • Stated differently, the management has used up all of the equity of the firm when the negative value of the retained earnings exceeds the value of the common stock.

  29. Performance Evaluation Strategic thinking and tactical execution Balanced Scorecard for quarters 3 through 6 Executive Briefings // Report to Board How well the company is prepared for the future

  30. Balanced Scorecard

  31. Why Use a Balanced Scorecard? It is too easy to get caught up in market share and short-term profits. Long-term viability requires that managers also deliver customer satisfaction and invest in the future. The balanced scorecard measures both the long-term and the short-term. The best managers will be good in all areas measured.

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